Background: Patient complaints can provide valuable insights into the quality and safety of clinical care. Studies examining the epidemiology of complaints in out-of-hours general practice internationally are limited.
Aim: To characterise patient complaints in an out-of-hours general practice setting.
Design and setting: Retrospective cohort study of patient complaints to an out-of-hours service provider in Dublin, Ireland, over a 5-year period (2011-2016). This comprises nurse-led telephone triage and GP consultations for patients with urgent problems.
Method: A modified version of the UK Healthcare Complaints Analysis Tool (HCAT) was utilised to code complaints, which were reviewed independently in duplicate by two academic GPs.
Results: Of 445 598 telephone contacts, 303 085 resulted in face-to-face GP consultations. Of 234 patients who made 298 complaints, 185 (79%) related to GP care. The remainder related to nurse triage, other staff, and management issues. A total of 109 (46%) related to children aged ≤18 years, and 134 (58%) of complainants were female. There were 0.61 complaints per 1000 GP consultations. Most complaints (n = 126, 42%) were in relation to clinical care problems, largely diagnosis and prescribing. Common themes included unmet management expectations and clinical examination dissatisfaction. Inter-rater reliability was 90% (κ statistic 0.84, 95% confidence interval = 0.80 to 0.88). Following internal investigation, 158 (85%) of GP-related complaints were managed effectively by the out-of-hours service.
Conclusion: The majority of complaints related to clinical care problems and were successfully managed locally. Expectation management may be an important way to mitigate the risk of complaints.
Keywords: cohort studies; general practice; out-of-hours medical care; patient complaints; retrospective studies.
© British Journal of General Practice 2018.